Leinster are the 14th team to contest a Heineken Cup final - in the 14th season of the tournament. The other Heineken Cup finalists have been Toulouse (5), Leicester Tigers and Munster (4 each), London Wasps, Stade Francais Paris, Brive (2 each), Cardiff RFC, Bath, Ulster, Colomiers, Northampton Saints, Perpignan and Biarritz Olympique (1 each).

- There are 232 players from the 13 matchday 22-man squads who own Heineken Cup final winners' medals - 42 have two medals and Cedric Heymans is out on his own with three (with Brive in 1997 and Toulouse in 2003 and 2005).

- The all-Ireland semi-final between Munster and Leinster at Croke Park earlier this month was watched by a world record crowd for a club rugby match of 82,208.

- Leicester Tigers have now matched Toulouse in qualifying for five tournament finals and also have the opportunity of joining Toulouse as triple title winners.

- Current Leicester Tigers players Marin Corry, Ben Kay, Lewis Moody and Geordan Murphy have all appeared in three previous finals (2001, 2002 and 2007) and could now join the elite eight players to have appeared in four finals.

The eight are Ronan O'Gara, John Hayes, David Wallace (Munster) and Yannick Jauzion, William Servat, Jean-Baptiste Poux, Fabien Pelous and Jean Bouilhou (Toulouse).

- This will be only the third Anglo-Irish final - with the score standing at 2-0 to the English clubs, Northampton Saints and Leicester Tigers beating Munster 9-8 in 2000 and 15-9 in 2002 respectively.

- It will be the 10th Heineken Cup final staged on a Saturday but only the third Saturday showpiece match in the last six seasons.

- Over three-quarters of a million fans are set to attend Heineken Cup finals - a total of 719,015 fans have gone through the turnstiles for the 13 finals so far at an average of 55,309 per match. The first final, between Cardiff and Toulouse at the old Arms Park on January 6, 1996, attracted a crowd of 21,800.

- Players from 14 different nationalities are on the winners' roll of honour, headed by 72 Englishmen and 65 Frenchmen. There are also players from Ireland (51), Scotland (10), Wales and New Zealand (eight each), South Africa (five), Samoa (four), Argentina (three), Australia (two) and one from each of Italy, USA, Canada and Poland.

- The most points scored in a Heineken Cup final is the 64 rattled up at Parc des Princes in 2001. The 34 scored that day by Leicester Tigers is the most scored by a team in a final and the 30 scored by Stade Francais Paris is the most scored by a losing team.

- The most tries scored in a final to date is the four by Brive when they beat Leicester Tigers 28-9 in Cardiff in 1997. The 19-point winning margin is the biggest in the 13 finals.

- The most points scored by an individual in a final is the 30 kicked by Stade Francais Paris' Diego Dominguez (nine penalty goals and a drop goal) in the 2001 defeat by Leicester.

- Two of the 13 finals have failed to produce a try - when Ulster beat Colomiers 21-6 in 1999 and when Toulouse needed extra-time in the 2005 final to beat Stade Francais Paris 18-12.

- This 14th final will be the 977th tournament match. Match number 1000 will be the penultimate pool match in round 2 of next season's tournament.

- Leinster have made it an Irish clean-sweep in that three of the four Irish provinces have now qualified for a final with Irish teams involved in six of the 14 matches.

They will be attempting to be the ninth team to lift the trophy following Toulouse (3), Leicester Tigers, Munster and London Wasps (2 each), Brive, Bath, Ulster and Northampton Saints.

- The 13 finals have produced 23 tries - an average of 1.77 per match - with two players scoring braces. Sebastien Carrat got two for Brive in the 1997 final and Leon Lloyd crossed twice for Leicester Tigers in Paris in 2001.

- Two of the finals have required extra-time to determine the winner and Toulouse won on both occasions, against Cardiff in 1996 and Stade Francais Paris in 2005.

- Chris White is the only referee to take charge of three finals - in 2003, 2005 and 2006.

- Austin Healey is the only player who has won two Heineken Cup final man-of-the-match awards, in the Tigers' back-to-back triumphs in 2001 and 2002.

- There have been three single nation finals, the strictly French affairs in 2003 (Toulouse v Perpignan) and 2005 (Toulouse v Stade Francais) and the battle of England in 2007 between London Wasps and Leicester Tigers.

- Raphael Ibanez, the London Wasps hooker, became the only front five forward so far to score a try in a Heineken Cup final when he crossed the Leicester Tigers' line in 2007.

Only four forwards have scored Heineken Cup final tries - the others are flankers David Wallace (Munster) in 2000 and Neil Back (Leicester Tigers) in 2001 and Munster number 8 Denis Leamy 12 months ago.

The countdown is on to the Women's Sevens Dublin tournament in UCD on August 22-23. Anthony Eddy, IRFU Director of Rugby Sevens & Women's Rugby, previews what promises to be an exciting couple of days.

Tickets for the tournament start at 5 euro, with children free, and are available to buy here - http://www.ticketmaster.ie/Womens-Sevens-Series-tickets/artist/2134381?tm_link=artist_artistvenue_module.

Jenny Murphy talks about the progress made by the Ireland Women's Sevens team and their pool draw for the upcoming Women's Sevens Dublin tournament in UCD on August 22-23.

Tickets for the tournament start at 5 euro, with children free, and are available to buy here - http://www.ticketmaster.ie/Womens-Sevens-Series-tickets/artist/2134381?tm_link=artist_artistvenue_module.

Conor Murray and Tommy Bowe speak to Irish Rugby TV about their Rugby World Cup preparations and thank the thousands of supporters who came out to see the players at the open training session at the Sportsground.

Ireland captain Paul O'Connell gives his verdict on the team's new Rugby World Cup jersey and talks about his move to French club Toulon. Ireland's RWC 2015 range is available to pre-order now from http://shop.irishrugby.ie.

Anthony Eddy, IRFU Director of Rugby Sevens, talks about the target of a top three finish for both the Ireland Men and Women in Lisbon this weekend, as they continue on their quests for Olympic qualification.

Tom Daly, who recently captained the Ireland Men's Sevens team to the European Division C and B titles, is looking forward to playing in this weekend's Rugby Europe Olympic Repechage tournament in Lisbon, Portugal.

Ireland will host the 'Women's Sevens Dublin' at UCD on Saturday, August 22 and Sunday, August 23. Tournament director Garrett Tubridy and Ireland stars Lucy Mulhall, Jenny Murphy and Louise Galvin speak about their excitement ahead of the World Rugby Women's Sevens Series qualifier.

Coach Allen Clarke and stand-in captain Billy Holland answer questions from the media following Emerging Ireland's 45-12 victory over Georgia in the final round of their successful Tbilisi Cup campaign.

Emerging Ireland coach Allen Clarke speaks about his side's five-try 33-7 win over Uruguay in the Tbilisi Cup and the first half injury to captain Rhys Ruddock. They wrap up the tournament against hosts Georgia on Sunday.

Speaking about the floods that occurred following the Tbilisi Cup's first round, Emerging Ireland team manager Joey Miles said: "A natural event like that, a tragedy like that puts the game of rugby into perspective. We express our regrets to the Georgian people and the Georgian Union for the terrible tragedy that they had."

David O'Reilly from the IRFU Charitable Trust's Corporate Patrons Committee speaks about the new scheme which provides businesses with unique networking opportunities and provides a platform for companies to effectively activate their CSR programmes. For further information, please contact Linda Black of the Charitable Trust - telephone (01) 6473866 or email: linda.black@irfu.ie / http://www.irishrugby.ie/news/34728.php.